Myself

From Mereja Words
Jump to: navigation, search

English

Etymology

From me (pronoun) + self (pronoun). Later partly reinterpreted as my + self (noun).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA: /maɪˈsɛlf/, SAMPA: /maI"sElf/
  • noicon(file)
  • Rhymes: -ɛlf
  • Hyphenation: my‧self

Pronoun

Myself (reflexive case of I)

  1. (reflexive) Me, as direct or indirect object the speaker as the object of a verb or preposition, when the speaker is also the subject.
    I taught myself.
  2. Personally, for my part; used in apposition to I, sometimes for simple emphasis and sometimes with implicit exclusion of any others performing the activity described.
  3. Me (as the object of a verb or preposition).
    • 1994, Nelson Mandela, Long Walk to Freedom, Abacus 2010, p. 36:
      Later I realized that the ignorant man that day was not the chief but myself.
  4. (archaic) I (as the subject of a verb).

Related terms

Notes

  • Use where I could be used is mostly poetic or archaic, except with a coordinating conjunction, such as and, as shown in the usage example.
  • Garner's Modern American Usage (2009) reports opposition to the intensifier use, especially where I could be used.
  • AP Stylebook Online (2010) reports opposition to the intensifier use as reflexive pronouns (myself) should not be used instead of objective pronouns (me).

Translations

See also

Noun

Myself (plural ourselves)
  1. that being which is oneself
    I am not myself today.

Translations

Statistics

es:myself fr:myself ko:myself hr:myself io:myself it:myself ku:myself hu:myself ml:myself my:myself nl:myself ja:myself pl:myself pt:myself ru:myself simple:myself fi:myself sv:myself ta:myself te:myself tr:myself vi:myself zh:myself